Type 41 75 mm mountain gun

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Type 41 75 mm mountain gun
Japanese Type 41 Mountain Gun.jpg
A Type 41 at the Yasukuni Shrine
TypeMountain gun
Place of originGermany
Service history
In service1908–1945
Used byImperial Japanese Army
WarsWorld War I, Second Sino-Japanese War, World War II, First Indochina War[1]
Production history
DesignerKrupp
ManufacturerOsaka Arsenal
Unit cost8,400 yen ($2,257 USD) in August 1939[2][3]
Specifications
Mass544 kg (1,199 lb)
Length4.31 m (14 ft 2 in)
Barrel length1.1 m (3 ft 7 in) L/19.2
Width1.219 m (4 ft)
Crew13

Caliber75 mm (2.95 in)
Breechinterrupted screw
RecoilHydro-spring
CarriageBox trail
Elevation-18° to +40°
Traverse
Muzzle velocity435 m/s (1,427 ft/s)
Maximum firing range7,022 m (7,679 yd)

The Type 41 75 mm mountain gun is a Japanese license-built copy of the recoiling Krupp M1908 mountain gun. The Type 41 number was designated for the year the gun was accepted, the 41st year of Emperor Meiji's reign, 1908 in the Gregorian calendar after the conclusion of the Russo-Japanese War.[4] Originally it was the standard pack artillery weapon. After it was superseded by the Type 94 75 mm mountain gun, it was then used as an infantry "regimental" gun, deployed four to each infantry regiment, and referred to as "rentai ho" (regimental artillery). Two gun shields were produced for the weapon, an early type, which folded into thirds, and a late type, which folded in half.

It can be disassembled and carried by horse, or manpacked (manually carried), making it convenient for use in mountainous regions and areas with many obstacles.

Service[]

In Japanese service the gun was crewed by thirteen men, twelve gunners and a squad leader. When the weapon was being fired there would be one aimer, one loader, one firer, one person to swing the guns aim left or right, a man inserting the fuzes into rounds and handing them to the loader, two gunners lying in reserve to the left and right of the gun position, and the squad leader sitting a little distance to the rear of the weapon. The remaining five men would ferry ammunition in relays from the ammunition squad, which would typically be in cover a few hundred meters behind the gun's position.

The weapon could be transported complete by its thirteen-man squad, or broken down into parts and carried on six pack horses using special harnesses, a seventh horse was used to carry ammunition.

Two types of impact fuze were available for the Type 97, a 75 mm high explosive round, one with a delay of 0.05 seconds, the second with a delay of 1 second. U.S. Army testing of the weapon at a range of 3,200 yards (2,900 m) resulted in 75 percent of the rounds falling in a rectangle 20 by 30 yards (18 by 27 m). At maximum range (7,100 m or 7,800 yards) 75 percent of the rounds fell within a rectangle 10 yards wide and 200 yards long (9 m wide and 180 m long).

Type 41 75 mm mountain gun in the Vietnam Military History Museum in Hanoi, Vietnam.
Type 41 mountain guns display in Surasakmontree Army Camp, Lampang, Thailand, 2016

Ammunition[]

  • Type 98 high-explosive – 4.5 kg (9.9 lb)
  • Type 97 high-explosive – 5.5 kg (12 lb)
  • Type 94 high-explosive – 6.01 kg (13.2 lb)
  • Type 90 high-explosive – 5.67 kg (12.5 lb)
  • Type 95 armor-piercing high-explosive – can penetrate 20 mm of steel plate at 3,000 m – 6.2 kg (14 lb)
  • Type 1 armor-piercing – 6.5 kg (14 lb)
  • Type 38 shrapnel – 6.8 kg (15 lb)
  • Type 90 shrapnel – 282 10.5 gram lead balls and 0.1 kg black powder bursting charge – 7.0 kg (15.4 lb)
  • Type 2 hollow charge – can penetrate 102 mm of RHA - 3.54 kg (7.8 lb)
  • Incendiary
  • Type 90 smoke (white phosphorus) – 5.72 kg (12.6 lb)
  • Type 90 incendiary – 6.9 kg (15 lb)
  • Liquid incendiary projectile – 5.33 kg (11.8 lb)
  • Type 90 illuminating – 5.64 kg (12.4 lb)
  • Vomit gas projectile – 6.01 kg (13.2 lb)

References[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Windrow, Martin (20 Sep 2018). French Foreign Légionnaire vs Viet Minh Insurgent: North Vietnam 1948–52. Combat 36. Osprey Publishing. p. 59. ISBN 9781472828910.
  2. ^ Military catalogue of the Japanese military, p. 96
  3. ^ Full text of Banking and Monetary Statistics, 1914-1941 : Part I | FRASER | St. Louis Fed. p. 673. Retrieved 2021-06-27.
  4. ^ War Department TM-E-30-480 Handbook on Japanese Military Forces September 1944 p 400

Bibliography[]

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